Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Geeks.
The Epstein Files are handled differently across the globe
The Lolita connection Jeffrey Epstein named his plane the "Lolita Express," which should have raised eyebrows. One could infer from this that he was boldly proclaiming that he transported underage girls.
By Cheryl E Prestonabout 7 hours ago in Geeks
The Distorted Mirror of Immortality: A Saturday Journey into the Heart of Moltobook 🪞
I have written about Moltobook before, but today I feel the need to do it again. It is Saturday, a time for rest, a brief escape from the daily hustle. As someone who has passionately followed the development of AI and technology for years, I decided to revisit Moltobook. It is a place that both attracts and repels. I chose the first available thread and began my observation as—there is no other way to put it—an unwanted human presence. 👤
By Piotr Nowakabout 9 hours ago in Geeks
The Ballad of Peckham Rye by Muriel Spark
A dark-comic novel which is often regarded as 'sharp', The Ballad of Peckham Rye (1960) displays all of the notes regularly associated with the author Muriel Spark. Set in post-war London, the novel follows the arrival of Dougal Douglas, an enigmatic and manipulative Scottish outsider who disrupts the mundane lives of the working-class community in Peckham. The layered narrative, the explorations of human weakness and the wit are all part and parcel of what makes the novel what it is.
By Annie Kapurabout 9 hours ago in Geeks
The Internet – How It Changed Our Lives 🌐
Many of us, practically every person on the planet, cannot imagine life without the internet. What would we do without this invention? How would our lives look? Now, try to imagine life without Facebook, Instagram, or other social media… without your favorite apps, without YouTube, without everything we use and rely on daily.
By Piotr Nowakabout 10 hours ago in Geeks
From My First PC to Today’s Machines — How Computers Evolved and Changed the World 💻🚀
The Evolution of Computing: From Room-Sized Giants to Pocket-Sized Gods Computers as we know them today are incredibly powerful — capable of performing advanced calculations in fractions of a second. But it wasn’t always like this. I’m still relatively young — I’m only 30 — yet I clearly remember my first PC and its configuration. It ran Windows 95, and the hard drive of my “super rig” had 1 GB of storage — about 600 MB of which was taken up by the operating system itself. A tear almost comes to my eye when I think back 😅. As a kid, I even deleted system files from C:/Windows because I didn’t have enough space for games 🎮.
By Piotr Nowakabout 10 hours ago in Geeks
Programming Then and Now: From Code to Building Blocks 🧱💡
A few years ago, programming meant spending long hours writing and debugging code, memorizing the syntax of languages like Java, Kotlin, or C++. Even the simplest app required technical knowledge, patience, and experience. Ideas without coding skills often remained just that — ideas.
By Piotr Nowakabout 10 hours ago in Geeks
Book Review: "A Voyage for Madmen" by Peter Nichols
"They were neither sportsmen nor yachtsmen. Only one of the nine crossed the finishing line after ten months at sea. The rest encountered despair, sublimity, madness and death". - "A Voyage for Madmen" by Peter Nichols
By Annie Kapurabout 15 hours ago in Geeks











